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South Koreans are boycotting anything Japanese

At supermarkets across the country, Japanese products are being pulled off shelves as a "Boycott Japan" movement quickly gathers steam online.

Korean customers are shunning beer, snacks or anything else from Japan. It's a hit that merchants here - are willing to take.

SOUTH KOREAN DIRECTOR AT PRUNE-MART, CHO MIN-HYUK, SAYING:

"We expect a 10-15% revenue drop. But despite our losses as a small business, we're going ahead with the boycott to protest the unfair export restrictions."

Protesters in South Korea see the limits as retaliation after the two sides clashed on an issue that stretches back to World War Two. Japan had colonized the Korean peninsula and forced many Koreans to work for its companies during wartime.

South Korea recently asked Japan to start a joint fund for the victims but Japan refused.

Online, screenshots of Japan trip cancellations have been trending on social media.

Twenty-nine-year-old Lee Sang-Won took a $100 hit for swapping his tickets to Japan for Taiwan instead. He says its a small price to pay.

29-YEAR-OLD SOUTH KOREAN DESIGNER, LEE SANG-WON, SAYING:

"I think it's important for us to show the Japanese government how we feel. The boycotts aren't about how much economic damage we can do, but more about raising awareness and sending a message."

The protests took a dark turn on Friday (July 19), when a South Korean man set himself on fire in front of the Japanese embassy. He died hours later at the hospital.

That same day in Tokyo, tensions were sky high in an exchange between Japan's foreign minister and South Korea's ambassador.

South Korea has rejected Japan's call for third-party arbitration and Japan has rejected South Korea's proposed plan to solve the issue. (Reuters)

At supermarkets across the country, Japanese products are being pulled off shelves as a "Boycott Japan" movement quickly gathers steam online.

Korean customers are shunning beer, snacks or anything else from Japan. It's a hit that merchants here - are willing to take.

SOUTH KOREAN DIRECTOR AT PRUNE-MART, CHO MIN-HYUK, SAYING:

"We expect a 10-15% revenue drop. But despite our losses as a small business, we're going ahead with the boycott to protest the unfair export restrictions."

Protesters in South Korea see the limits as retaliation after the two sides clashed on an issue that stretches back to World War Two. Japan had colonized the Korean peninsula and forced many Koreans to work for its companies during wartime.

South Korea recently asked Japan to start a joint fund for the victims but Japan refused.